4.5 Review

Phosphorus homeostasis: acquisition, sensing, and long-distance signaling in plants

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY REPORTS
Volume 49, Issue 8, Pages 8071-8086

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11033-022-07354-9

Keywords

Phosphorus stress; Phosphorus homeostasis; miR399; PHT; PHR1

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Phosphorus is an essential nutrient for plant growth and development, but often limits plant growth. Plants have various mechanisms to sense the phosphorus content in the soil and regulate root growth to adapt to low phosphorus conditions. Crop improvement strategies under low phosphorus conditions can focus on improving phosphorus acquisition efficiency or increasing phosphorus utilization. Phosphate transporters, transcription factors, microRNAs, and proteins play important roles in regulating cellular phosphorus homeostasis.
Phosphorus (P), an essential nutrient required by plants often becomes the limiting factor for plant growth and development. Plants employ various mechanisms to sense the continuously changing P content in the soil. Transcription factors, such as SHORT ROOT (SHR), AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR19 (ARF19), and ETHYLENE-INSENSITIVE3 (EIN3) regulate the growth of primary roots, root hairs, and lateral roots under low P. Crop improvement strategies under low P depend either on improving P acquisition efficiency or increasing P utilization. The various phosphate transporters (PTs) are involved in the uptake and transport of P from the soil to various plant cellular organelles. A plethora of regulatory elements including transcription factors, microRNAs and several proteins play a critical role in the regulation of coordinated cellular P homeostasis. Among these, the well-established P starvation signaling pathway comprising of central transcriptional factor phosphate starvation response (PHR), microRNA399 (miR399) as a long-distance signal molecule, and PHOSPHATE 2 (PHO2), an E2 ubiquitin conjugase is crucial in the regulation of phosphorus starvation responsive genes. Under PHR control, several classes of PHTs, microRNAs, and proteins modulate root architecture, and metabolic processes to enable plants to adapt to low P. Even though sucrose and inositol phosphates are known to influence the phosphorus starvation response genes, the exact mechanism of regulation is still unclear. In this review, a basic understanding of P homeostasis under low P in plants and all the above aspects are discussed.

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